I wonder where? What a waste of time. — jgill
For example, an organism tuned to fitness might see small and large quantities of some resource as, say, red, to indicate low fitness, whereas they might see intermediate quantities as green, to indicate high fitness. — green flag
They are referring to some aspect of their experience that, perhaps in principle, I am unable to access for myself. — Michael
How could you tell they see the water as green? Ex hypothesi, there is no distinction here. What difference would there be between the critter saying "There is a good quantity of water" and "the water is green"?...quite literally... — Michael
How could you tell they see the water as green? Ex hypothesi, there is no distinction here. What difference would there be between the critter saying "There is a good quantity of water" and "the water is green"? — Banno
Yeah, you can, because they can tell you. Indeed, that's how we know about synaesthesia. — Banno
It's not private. — Banno
So why is that evidence that he means something different by the words “red” and “green” but the person who tells me that the number 7 is red is evidence of synesthesia? — Michael
Sure, but that does not mean you have no idea of what he is talking about. We do understand when someone else talks of their pain, despite not being the one experiencing it. And we do understand what synaesthesia is, and we understand that it happens to them but not to us. I rather think that if you hold it to be private, then it's up to you to explain how you are using the word.His experiences, the things he talks about, definitely are private; I can’t see them for myself. I just have to take his word for it that things are as he says they are. — Michael
So, going back to your question, how does any of this pose a problem for Wittgenstein, or for Davidson? It seems to me to reinforce his point, that what we talk about is public, and if it is private it drops out of our conversation.
And that is pretty much what I would offer as "what I mean" by private and public. — Banno
It isn't evidence at all, of any private unsharable phenomena. — Banno
A private language is a language that someone else cannot understand. Hence, if something is private, the it is not available for discussion.
Yet synesthesia, and pain, and the colour red, and so on, are available for discussion. Hence they are not private.
So there is something deeply problematic in philosophical discussions that propose private "phenomena" that they then proceed to describe in detail. — Banno
Anyway, that's a side issue to your suggesting that synesthesia is problematic for Wittgenstein. Have you droped that view?
I do not know exactly where, within me, this system lies. — Metaphysician Undercover
So the question of where this faculty is, which makes the judgements, is not even relevant at this point. — Metaphysician Undercover
All that is necessary now is that we recognize the reality of those judgements. — Metaphysician Undercover
I didn't give wave-particle duality the label : "paradox". That what the scientists trying to understand the evidence of their experiments called it, when it contradicted their classical expectations. Einstein & co. tried to contradict their contradiction (the Copenhagen compromise or accomodation to uncertainty) with the EPR paradox*1*2. This was a difference of opinion among experts : literally a para-dox*3. Is Zeno's paradox really a paradox, or simply the result of inappropriate framing of a question?*4That's not a paradox. The equations of QM are very clear, and certainly not contradictor. You cannot use them as an example of accomodating a paradox. Shut up and calculate. — Banno
, how would one know that the posited creature was seeing green, and not seeing quantity? The critter would say "the water is green" when there is the right amount of water, and "the water is red" otherwise; so a better account would be simply that for the critter, "red" means the wrong quantity of water in that creature's language, while "green" just means "the right quantity of water". That is, one cannot divorce the meaning from the use. — Banno
I’m saying that the colours they see and talk about are private to them. — Michael
One problem with this privacy talk is the implied possibility of a p-zombie. — green flag
If AI gets good at reading your mind, will that change your mind ? — green flag
It could be that first-person experiences are an unavoidable, deterministic consequence of a sufficiently advanced responsive organism. — Michael
How does this not avoid the homunculus fallacy though? The ghost is already in the machine. That is the very thing to be explained though. It's too "just so" or "brute fact" perhaps? — schopenhauer1
I don't understand the issue. If I say that it's an unavoidable, deterministic consequence that heating an ice cube above 0 degree celsius will cause it to melt, am I committing a homunculus fallacy? — Michael
These are all physical events. — schopenhauer1
And it might be a physical fact that a sufficiently advanced brain will cause first person experiences. — Michael
f you said to me, "a feeling of melting is felt by the ice cube", becomes a question of "how?". And you can say, "feeling like something" is a property of the universe. And then I would question that further for explanation. Otherwise yes, that is just brute fact and not useful. Why is blue? If you said, "Blue is one part of the universe sensing blue" then we have some circular reasoning. — schopenhauer1
I’m sorry but I just don’t understand what you’re asking. — Michael
Certainly a logical possibility. Maybe not a physical possibility. It could be that first-person experiences are an unavoidable, deterministic consequence of a sufficiently advanced responsive organism. — Michael
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